ham notes

This commit is contained in:
Thomas Bishop 2026-01-26 19:24:52 +00:00
parent ef78c806c2
commit 96f8556231
3 changed files with 121 additions and 0 deletions

34
zk/Antennas.md Normal file
View file

@ -0,0 +1,34 @@
---
tags: [radio, ham-study]
---
> Antennas convert electrical signals into radio waves and radio waves into
> electrical signals
Different sized antennae are used for different
[frequency](./Frequency_modulation.md) bands. In general, **longer wavelengths
(hence lower frequencies) require larger antennas**.
There are five antenna that you need to know for the exam:
- the half wave dipole
- the quarter wave
- the five-eighth wave
- the end-fed long wire
- the Yagi (beam) antenna
## The half wave dipole
![](../img/dipole-a.jpg)
Its total length is equal to half a wavelength. This informs the length it needs
to be in order to pick up a certain frequency.
![](../img/dipole-b.jpg)
For example, if 15MHz has a wavelength of 20 meters, your dipole should be 10
meters long ($\frac{20/2} = 10$).
The signal from a dipole radiates as follows:
![](../img/dipole-radiation-pattern.gif)

54
zk/Feeders.md Normal file
View file

@ -0,0 +1,54 @@
---
tags: [radio, ham-study]
---
**Feeder** is the cable that connects the transmitter/receiver to the antenna.
As the EM energy travels through the feeder, some energy is lost as heat.
- The longer the feeder, the greater the loss
- The higher the frequency being transmitted, the greater the loss
> This is why for VHF and UHF thicker, low-loss feeder is needed
## Types of feeder
The two types of feeder you need to know for the exam:
- coaxial
- twin feeder (a.k.a "ladder line")
![](../img/feeder-types.png)
### Coaxial cable
![](../img/coaxial-diagram.jpg)
The inner conductor carries the signal. The screening keeps the signal within
the inner cable preventing loss.
It is **unbalanced** because the outer shield is at
[ground potential](./Ground.md) whereas the central conductor has a varying
voltage relative to ground.
### Twin feeder
![](../img/ladder-line-feeder.jpg)
Here we have two wires with spacers maintaining seperation. The two wires carry
equal and opposite signals.
Twin feeder is balanced because neither wire is grounded. Both have the same
impedence to ground in a symmetrical fashion. If wire A is at +5V, wire B will
be at -5V. Because of [alternating current](./Voltage_sources.md), they swap
over their potential difference at each cycle, making them effeectively
interchangeable.
![](../img/feeder-balance.png)
## Why balanced/unbalanced feeder matters
Some antennas are suited to unbalanced feeder whilst others are suited to
balanced feeder. If you want to use an unbalanced feeder with a balanced antenna
(or vice versa) you can do so, but this requires a Balun (balanced-to-unbalanced
transformer).

View file

@ -0,0 +1,33 @@
---
tags: [radio, ham-study]
---
![](../img/feeder-connector-types.png)
## PL259
![](../img/PL259-connector.jpg)
- screw-thread locking
- common for HF
## N
![](../img/N-type-connector.jpg)
- screw-thread locking
- common for VHF/UHF
## BNC
![](../img/bayonet-connector.jpg)
- 50Ohm version
- bayonet locking
## SMA
![](../img/sma-cable.jpg)
- screw-thread locking
- often found on handheld radios